Philippine Daily Inquirer

The 7107 prescripti­on

Sunny days, nippy nights, ample booze, stylish garb… and music, music, music

- By Allan Policarpio Photos by Richard Reyes

CLARK FREEPORT ZONE—The crowd was abuzz and buzzed out. The 7107 Internatio­nal Music Festival field at the Global Gateway Logistics City area simmered with excitement on Sunday night; the air thick with cigarette smoke and the unmistakab­le whiff of weed.

On that second and last night of the fest, to deafening roars and shrieks, members of the red-hot Red Hot Chili Peppers (RHCP) took the stage one by one—Chad Smith (drums), Josh Klinghoffe­r (guitar), Michael “Flea” Balzary (bass) and Anthony Kiedis (vocals)—and set the pace with an opening jam that rose to a maddening crescendo and exploded in a lights-and-sound spectacle. The icons have descended.

Please don’t

The US band, seven-time Grammy winner, opened its

90-minute, 18-song set with the hit “Can’t Stop.” (And how the crowd wished it wouldn’t!) RHCP was performing in the country for the first time and the fans were resolutely soaking in every bit of the repertoire that heated up the otherwise chilly night.

Instantane­ously, they raised their fists, jerking their heads to the funky beat and partly rapped verses. Only the first number, and the rock stars were already in full throttle.

Hippity-hopping, whirling and flailing across the stage, jumping and bike-kicking in the air, Kiedis moved briskly from one showstoppe­r to another—“Snow (Hey Oh),” “Dani California,” “Right on Time,” “Soul to Squeeze,” “Californic­ation,” “Look Around,” “By theWay”…

Finally, with familiar guitar licks from “Give It Away,” RHCP concluded over 24 hours of music over the course of two days.

Two stages

While everything else seemed like a blur after RHCP set the stage ablaze, it should be put on record that many other artists who went onstage before the band performed fantastic sets. With the 55 acts in the lineup that covered a spectrum of genres—rock, pop, indie, hip-hop, electronic dance music—7107 had almost everyone’s music preference­s covered. On two stages, no less.

Grammy-nominated artist Kendrick Lamar had hip-hop fans bopping to his slick, melodic rap in “P & P” and “Bitch, Don’t Kill My Vibe.”

The Australian electronic duo Empire of the Sun pulled out all theatrical stops in a production that featured a bevy of dancers. Dishing out glam synths and reverb-heavy tunes (“We Are the People,” “Walking on a Dream”) was Luke Steele, whose showmanshi­p was matched only by his ornate, intergalac­tic journeyman costume.

Local power

Although Itchyworms performed during the day, and was thus unable to take advantage of the main stage’s fancy lights setup, the band delivered a fun and rollicking poprock set that aptly ended with “Beer,” to the delight of the booze-guzzling crowd.

Up Dharma Down’s Armi Millare sang woefully of unrequited love in “Oo” and of hesitation in “Indak,” in her sultry and deceptivel­y powerful voice that undulated in the glow of the afternoon sun.

Lourd de Veyra of Radioactiv­e Sago Project may have lost a big chunk of the audience to the US rock band The Red Jumpsuit Apparatus, but the appreciati­ve few who gathered around the second stage were rewarded with a burst of festive and bombastic sounds of percussion and brass instrument­s in a 30-minute jazzrock set.

Massive dance hall

While the second day catered more to rockers, the opening day was party-goers heaven, with DJs Riddler, Kaskade, Alvaro and Reid Stefan turning the immediate area around the main stage into a massive dance hall, with relentless bass lines and hypnotic rhythms shaking the ground.

The crowd couldn’t be more different at the second stage area. The atmosphere was relaxed, and there was a faint smell of weed in the air, which Kjwan frontman Marc Abaya sensed midway through his set. “I can tell that that is the good kind,” he jested.

Most of the revelers over there seemed content sitting or lying on the ground, listening to indie bands—Maude, Techy Romantics, Run Manila, Taken by Cars…

Other acts that performed at 7107 were Sponge Cola, Rocksteddy, Abra and Loonie, Kid Ink, Luciana, Natives, The As-

teroids Galaxy Tour, Immerze, She’s Only Sixteen and Pulso.

Rockin’ celebs

Celebritie­s spotted included: Anne Curtis and Erwan Heussaff, Dingdong Dantes and Marian Rivera, Jasmine CurtisSmit­h and Sam Concepcion, Rhian Ramos and KC Montero, Aubrey Miles and Troy Montero; Lauren Young, Janine Gutierrez, the Magalona family, Daniel Matsunaga, and the Roco brothers.

The event likewise drew a good number of spectators who flew in to see the RHCP perform. “We have a lot of people from Singapore, California, and a handful from Europe and Australia,” producer Mike Pio Roda told the INQUIRER on Saturday.

For events held in vast open spaces, weather is among organizers’ biggest concerns. Fortunatel­y, 7107 revelers enjoyed good weather throughout— and sunny during the day, nippy and breezy at night.

Best fest garb

The young and stylish came out in their best music fest garb—usually a combinatio­n of crop tops, tanks, denim cutoffs, swim wear, flower headbands. (If only one of your ankles or armpits could be seen, you were likely overdresse­d.)

Turned out, fashion was as big a component of the scene as the music itself. In fact, some youngsters seemed more preoccupie­d with parading their gear than checking out the performers onstage.

The afternoons were spent mostly for lounging, sunbathing or taking leisurely walks around the 28-hectare event area. The nights, needless to say, were about booze, cigarettes, weed… and then some more of it. And music, music, music.

Up to you

You wanted to dance silly? Some DJ was dispensing headnumbin­g bass lines from the main stage. If you were lucky, you might sight some celeb doingmoves best left to characters in “The Matrix.”

You wanted to bang your head and scream your brains out? Kjwan’s Marc Abaya over at the second stage was pouring beer all over his face and dropping F-bombs left and right.

It was all up to you.

 ??  ?? RED HOT Chili Peppers (from left) Flea Balzary, Chad Smith (back), Josh Klinghoffe­r, Anthony Kiedis take the stage. INQSnap this page (not just the logo) formore photos!
RED HOT Chili Peppers (from left) Flea Balzary, Chad Smith (back), Josh Klinghoffe­r, Anthony Kiedis take the stage. INQSnap this page (not just the logo) formore photos!
 ??  ?? A FAN in a personal spooky-skull tent
A FAN in a personal spooky-skull tent
 ??  ?? A FAN expresses her love.
A FAN expresses her love.
 ??  ?? RHIAN Ramos and KCMontero
RHIAN Ramos and KCMontero
 ??  ?? SIBLINGS Maxene and ElmoMagalo­na
SIBLINGS Maxene and ElmoMagalo­na
 ??  ?? REVELERS record the event with cell phones.
REVELERS record the event with cell phones.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? YOUNG fan enjoys the sights from a vantage point.
YOUNG fan enjoys the sights from a vantage point.
 ??  ?? EARLY afternoon revelers lounge on the sprawling grounds.
EARLY afternoon revelers lounge on the sprawling grounds.
 ??  ?? JANINE Gutierrez
JANINE Gutierrez
 ??  ?? KJWAN
KJWAN
 ??  ?? RADIOACTIV­E Sago Project’s Lourd de Veyra (center) performs “Tungkol saWala.”
RADIOACTIV­E Sago Project’s Lourd de Veyra (center) performs “Tungkol saWala.”
 ??  ?? LUKE Steele of Empire of the Sun
LUKE Steele of Empire of the Sun
 ??  ?? MUSICALO
MUSICALO
 ??  ?? JUGS Jugueta of Itchyworms
JUGS Jugueta of Itchyworms
 ??  ?? JASMINE Curtis-Smith
JASMINE Curtis-Smith
 ??  ?? KID INK
KID INK
 ??  ?? THEMAIN stage, one of two
THEMAIN stage, one of two
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? DANIEL Matsunaga
DANIEL Matsunaga
 ??  ?? KENDRICK Lamar
KENDRICK Lamar

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